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Overview
With uncanny insight and deadpan humor, the twelve stories in Pete Duval's debut collection feature night shift workers, lapsed Catholics, bullies, and smalltime thieves struggling with their jobs, their religion, and their families. Duval records in a fresh, off-kilter voice the desperate measures, heated confrontations, and moments of grace that occur in working-class communities. Throughout the collection, Duval explores his characters with compassion and candor and an eye for the surprising moment.
Synopsis
With uncanny insight and deadpan humor, the twelve stories in Pete Duval's debut collection feature night shift workers, lapsed Catholics, bullies, and smalltime thieves struggling with their jobs, their religion, and their families. Duval records in a fresh, off-kilter voice the desperate measures, heated confrontations, and moments of grace that occur in working-class communities. Throughout the collection, Duval explores his characters with compassion and candor and an eye for the surprising moment.
Publishers Weekly
Working-class characters struggling with their fates populate the monochromatic New England landscape of Duval's 12 stories. Often lapsed Catholics, they measure the bleakness of their existence against memories of better times. In "Impala," Roy Potts persuades his wife, Maysle, to drive to New Orleans so he can relive the "fun" of his youth. Over the grim course of the trip, both Roy and Maysle suffer different variations of midlife crises, yet keep their longings and losses to themselves. Other stories feature more ambitious storytelling. In the substantial but rather disjointed "Bakery," Gus feuds with a sadistic co-worker at his factory job baking bread; in "Pious Objects," a lonely priest offers solace to a man who hasn't taken confession in 20 years. A few of the stories are dark forays into the fantastic. In "Cellular," Frank Lecuyer, a retired postal worker who lives with his "mentally impaired" wife, Gladys, and his whippet, Tex (a spirited character in his own right), fights the construction of a cellular tower bordering his property; in "Fun with Mammals," the narrator helps transport a narwhal across the country on a flatbed truck. Duval is an inventive stylist, but his pacing is hit-or-miss, and the occasional epiphany he delivers fails to balance the leaden glumness of his protagonists. (July 28) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Editorials
From the Publisher
"[These stories] illuminate the lives of working-class people with moments of rare beauty..." Kirkus Reviews, Starred"Duval is an inventive stylist." Publishers Weekly
"A fresh voice and approach..." Booklist, ALA
"Intriguing . . . Duval is the master of convincing details." Boston Globe
"A confident, hard-muscled debut from a writer who knows how to handle the wheel even while flicking glances up at the mirror where all those miles recede behind us." The San Francisco Chronicle
"Honest, funny, sad . . .Pete Duval's sense of story is as unerring as his generosity toward his people is heartening."βStewart O'Nan
"Knocks you back, makes you rethink your life, with its daily rhythms, small epiphanies, moments of hope and despair, and glimpses of grandeur. . . an auspicious debut."βJay Parini